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Challenging Nature: The Clash of Science and Spirituality at the New Frontiers of Life Hardcover – May 30, 2006

4.1 out of 5 stars 20 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Ecco; First Edition edition (May 30, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060582677
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060582678
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 1.4 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,977,210 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By Dr. Lee D. Carlson HALL OF FAMEVINE VOICE on September 7, 2006
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
The current battle between "natural" and genetically modified (GM) crops has in many instances taken on the intensity and silliness of the battle between the advocates of AC and DC power in the early years of the twentieth century. The advocates of natural foods it seems will go to any length to portray the "dangers" of GM crops, but have no evidence to support their campaign of vituperation. The biotechnology/scientific community for the most part has shied away from countering these tactics, hoping maybe that by ignoring them they will go away. In only a small number of cases have a few confident individuals stepped up to the plate to defend the virtues and science behind biotechnology.

The author of this book is one of these individuals, and he has given the reader a fascinating account of what is possible, and what is not, in genetic engineering and twenty-first century biology in general. He thankfully does not hold back in countering the exaggerations and misrepresentations that emanate both from religious circles and "New Age secularists." But the book contains more than just counterarguments, for the author discusses some of the modern developments in biology that may have not caught the attention of the average reader. These developments are awesome if viewed by what was possible in biotechnology only two decades ago. Breathtaking advances have occurred since then, and with even more coming in the years ahead, one could argue easily that this is the best time ever to be alive.

And life is what this book is about, that is, natural life, which the author argues correctly constitutes genetically modified organisms as well as organisms that have come about without the intervention of humans.
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Format: Hardcover
In "Challenging Nature: The Clash of Science and Spirituality at the New Frontiers of Life" molecular biologist Lee Silver defends science and biotechnology from a perversely orthogonal cabal of retrograde fundamentalist Christians ensnared in faith-based fallacies abetted by progressive Gaia devotees saddled with equally mystical mumbo-jumbo. Silver positions these constituencies as allergic reactions to the increasing explanatory power of science and correctly notes that both viewpoints are spiritually motivated. He forcefully argues that eco-environmentalism simply swaps Mother Nature as a quasi-Goddess for the male God of Abraham. The President's Council on Bioethics - as presently constituted by the Bush administration - is properly excoriated by word and deed as little more than a dysfunctional mélange of befuddled science deniers, who with fox in the henhouse inanity circumscribe the activities of the US biotech community.

Silver succinctly deconstructs the ideological bias underlying essential concepts "like organic, natural, species, human being and life itself" and extends this reasoning to encompass why "nearly every literate person perceives natural as a synonym for good, whereas the opposite idea - unnatural, artificial and synthetic - evokes a reflexive negative reaction." That nature operates by natural selection "red in tooth and claw" (or green in root and branch) is dramatically framed in a pitiless examination of the vicious and unceasing struggles between Amazon rainforest organisms versus the human preference for pastoral Pollyannaism.
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Format: Hardcover
I LOVED this book!!! This wide-ranging book looks at science through the lens of different cultures in the US, Europe, Asia, and even Africa. It is extremely well-researched and often conveys information through story-telling. Even though a lot of scientific information is presented, it is done so with clarity and even in an entertaining manner. The author presents both sides of a controversy, sets out the essential facts, lets you know where he stands, but then invites the reader to make up his or her own mind. The book is a very easy read. It tackles a number of controversial topics and is extremely provocative. It deserves to be widely read!!!
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Many reviewers have focused on Silver's advocacy positions, which is fine and they certainly are there. But he almost never rants, and his point of view seldom gets in the way of his superb reporting of some jaw-dropping "gee whiz science." Almost no scientific sophistication is required to understand the science he's described, although the science is not dumbed-down, and the book is well worth reading for the science reporting (and explaining) alone.
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Format: Hardcover
In Challenging Nature, Lee M. Silver, Professor of Molecular Biology and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton Univ. and the author of the critically acclaimed Remaking Eden, has written a brilliant exposition of "the clash of science and spirituality at the new frontiers of life."

In explaining the frontiers of modern biotechnology and genetic engineering, or genetic modification (GM), Silver, a hands-on scientist who has actually manipulated genes, offers a provocative and controversial look at the collision of science, religion, pseudoscience, and politics.

The conflict between materialism and spiritualism (science vs. religion, reason vs. faith) is not new to our era, but has persisted for centuries. However, present-day proposals for projects such as embryonic stem-cell research, cloning, and genetically modified food (which may actually be safer than organically produced food) have come under vitriolic attack not only from the "right" (religious fundamentalists and ultraconservative politicians) but also, surprisingly, from the "left" (New Age, post-Christian "defenders" of Mother Nature and Mother Earth). "Nature," says Silver, "can be a bitch."

As a molecular biologist, Silver is a rationalist, secularist, evolutionist, and materialist, or more accurately, a physicalist, for as he points out, the term "physicalism" is preferable to "materialism," since the universe contains both material and immaterial (massless) particles, such as photons, that exert forces on one another.
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